She said she would "have to think about" staying in the marriage, and expressed guilt and regret regarding her actions following Martin's death in February 2012. She recently pleaded guilty to perjury for lying about the state of her family's finances during a bond hearing in April 2012. She had claimed she and her husband were broke, when in reality they had collected about $135,000 in donations.

"I can rationalize a lot of reasons for why I was misleading, but the truth is I knew I was lying,” Shellie Zimmerman told ABC. “I wish a lot things were different. I can’t tell you how many times I have laid at night saying 'God, I wish these circumstances had been different.'”

Zimmerman also said the publicity around the polarizing trial forced her and her husband to live in constant fear.

"I think we have been pretty much like gypsies," she said in the ABC interview. "We lived in a 20-foot trailer in the woods scared every night that someone was going to find us and that we’d be out in the woods alone and that it would be horrific."

Since his acquittal, George Zimmerman has been in the headlines several times. In late July, he reportedly helped a family escape from an overturned SUV. A report from the Seminole County Sheriff's Office confirmed his involvement.

More recently, Zimmerman was pulled over in traffic not once, but twice. The first time, he was given a verbal warning for a traffic violation in Texas, and reportedly told officers he had a firearm in his glove compartment. The second time was in Florida Tuesday, when he was issued a $256 ticket for speeding.